this question is so vague it can't really be answered correctly. ALL OSI protocol layers are involved in browsing a web page... the individual protocol layers become more prominent as you start either debugging a problem, or coding a service to operate on them. The real question is, what problem are you solving with this knowledge?
–
Mike PenningtonApr 17 '11 at 19:10

4 Answers
4

The protocols you are talking about are application protocols, and are handled on the Application layer, the contents of this layer are encapsulated and passed to the layer right after it (Presentation), and so on. So each layer only needs to know what format are the layers directly related to it.

That means that application protocols like FTP, HTTP and so on are not really recognized by the link layer, the link layer is only concerned about MAC addresses and talking to the Network and Physical Layers.

If what you want to know to what layer or what protocol is used for something, you can battle the IANA long listings or use the Wikipedia simplified list of protocols.

Ah, that was your question :) You check the hardware you are using, the physical layer is pretty specific and the hardware will sure tell you what kind of protocol it is using.
–
coredumpApr 17 '11 at 16:38

I don't think so,and I know for LAN the link layer protocol is ethernet,but not sure what is the one for WAN.
–
kernelApr 17 '11 at 16:43

1

as @mgjk mentioned on his answer, the media and the protocol will change from your router forward. I am not sure if its possible to discover all the link medias on a path between 2 points. You could try using the MTU, but that's a completely wild guess.
–
coredumpApr 17 '11 at 16:45

How to do the tricks to reverse-engineer what might be going on?
–
kernelApr 17 '11 at 16:40

You can use non-fragmenting packets of progressively decreasing size to try to learn something about the frame size of the networks you're traversing. Note that the MTU along the path will only decrease... never increase, so your knowledge will be very, very incomplete. The frame size is a hint as to the technology of the Link Layer. Another way as @coredump mentioned, for your first hop, you can use your MTU to give you a hint as to what you're on. (1500 Ethernet, 4464 Token Ring, 1492 PPPoE... )
–
mgjkApr 17 '11 at 17:39

There is no definitive way to trace the media used along a TCP/IP transmission path, the protocol was specifically designed to abstract that way from higher level protocols. Sometimes hints can be gleaned by examining things like the MTU size, as certain transmission media use slightly different MTUs, but fancier routers will reassemble packets to hide even that much information.

Your best bet is to run a trace-route along the path. Sometimes the names the telcos give the hops can tell you what kind of link it is, and from there sufficient googling can sometimes give you what kind of media path it is likely to be along that segment.

Keep in mind that media translation hides all of this. In one memorable troubleshooting case of mine a decade ago, one Ethernet segment was translated 3 times between hops (Router -> Fibre -> twisted-pair -> thick-net -> twisted-pair -> distribution switch) which was invisible when looking at packets; the only clue that this was going on was in inter-packet latencies and round-trip-times, and even then it took consulting the network documentation to figure out exactly what's going on. This gets even worse when talking about Internet communication.

There is no obvious and reliable way to determine the underlying transport used to connect you to a webpage. Sometimes a traceroute will give you hints... for example, when I traceroute to Google, I see:

my cable provider's DOCSIS network

my cable provider's Ethernet network

the backbone transit network (either Level-3 or tbone)

Beyond that, knowing whether your bits are moving over an ATM, SONET, DOCSIS, DWDM, etc network is interesting trivia, but not very relevant.